The CBO Sees the Economic Cliff Ahead
by
Ron Paul
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Last
week the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) issued its annual long-term
budget outlook report, and the 2012 numbers are not promising. In
fact, the CBO estimates that federal debt will rise to 70% of GDP
by the end of the year the highest percentage since World War
II. The report also paints a stark picture of entitlement spending,
as retiring Baby Boomers will cause government spending on health
care, Social Security, and Medicare to explode as a percentage of
GDP in coming years.
While the mainstream
media correctly characterized the CBO report as highly pessimistic,
they also ignored longstanding errors of methodology in CBO estimates.
And those errors tend to support arguments for higher taxes and
government spending, when in fact America needs exactly the opposite.
As Paul Roderick
Gregory explained in a
recent Forbes column, CBO has always applied wrongheaded assumptions
inherent in Keynesian economics when forecasting future deficits no matter how many times both history and economic theory have
proven such assumptions incorrect. In particular, CBO seems wedded
to two enduring Keynesian myths: First, that higher taxes necessarily
increase federal revenue and have no negative effect on the economy;
and second, that lower government spending hurts the economy. Neither
is true, of course.
CBO also fails
to factor in unexpected wars and expensive foreign entanglements,
and we should not assign too much validity to predictive models
based on peace. Judging from the actions and rhetoric coming from
both parties in Washington, new military entanglements in Syria
and Iran may well spike military spending in coming years.
Despite these
sobering budget realities, the CBO report suggests that a solution
is possible with merely a few minor adjustments in the way Congress
handles economic issues. But what we need are not minor adjustments,
but rather a fundamental shift in our philosophy of government.
If we could come to our senses about the proper role of government
in America, and what level of government interference is appropriate
in a free economy, we would quickly find that there is no reason
for government to spend so much, borrow so much, and tax so much.
If
we simply allowed markets to work free of governmental or Federal
Reserve interference, bad debt would be liquidated relatively quickly
and malinvestment would be curtailed. Scaled-back regulations would
encourage businesses to expand. Lower taxes would jump start investment
and spur job creation.
This is not
rocket science, it is Economics 101. All it would take is for government
to get out of the way. There would be some short term pain, of course,
but only by allowing the bubble to burst and bad debt to liquidate
can we ever hope to begin building a real economy again.
The CBO report
was alarming to most simply because they know neither party will
take the steps necessary to avoid eventual fiscal calamity. Instead,
despite their rhetoric, both parties want to maintain the fantasy
that deficits dont matter. But the CBO report,
combined with what is happening in Greece and the European Union,
should finally make the undeniable case that economic realities
apply even to industrialized first world economies. We must take
concrete steps today to avoid having America become the next Greece.
See
the Ron Paul File

June
14, 2012
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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